This article concentrates on Muriel Spark’s The Ballad of Peckham Rye (1960) and its indirect and mediated representation of the welfare state in the form of a ‘social-scientific imagination’, manifested in both cultural ideology and literary form. The ‘social-scientific imagination’ describes the textual engagement of Spark’s novel with the language and technique of newly professionalised social-scientific disciplines, in particular with new sociological studies of working life. In its representation of a shift in official modes of organising the social body, Spark's novel prefigures the ideological undermining of the welfare state through the invocation of individual responsibility and anti-bureaucratization
What is clear from even a cursory reading of Muriel Spark’s dazzling and cunning fictions is that sh...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2012My dissertation examines the emergence of a new langua...
The central argument of this thesis is that several tropes or motifs exist in social novels of the 1...
This thesis explores how writers mobilise what I call the “social-scientific imagination” to think ...
This essay looks at how Spark’s fiction from around the turn of the 1960s (Robinson, The Ballad of P...
This chapter addresses the role that progressive twentieth century British design ideology can be se...
Discusses Spark\u27s well-known novel, recognizing its curious amalgamation of acerbic humour, eleg...
Muriel Spark\u27s fiction, often considered as being religious in theme and content, is equally dist...
The essay suggests how the relationship between catholicism and creativity is structured in Spark's ...
A striking feature of Muriel Spark’s fiction is its insistence on the reality of the supernatural, w...
This essay considers Muriel Spark’s experience, staging and critique of ‘fake news’, or the propagan...
Science Fiction as a literary genre offers a unique platform for social commentary. It presents plau...
Muriel Spark’s novels are full of characters who offer advice to live by – advice both good and bad....
Literary fiction and social science, despite the fact that they comprise two methodologically autono...
Muriel Spark’s novels are full of characters who offer advice to live by – advice both good and bad....
What is clear from even a cursory reading of Muriel Spark’s dazzling and cunning fictions is that sh...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2012My dissertation examines the emergence of a new langua...
The central argument of this thesis is that several tropes or motifs exist in social novels of the 1...
This thesis explores how writers mobilise what I call the “social-scientific imagination” to think ...
This essay looks at how Spark’s fiction from around the turn of the 1960s (Robinson, The Ballad of P...
This chapter addresses the role that progressive twentieth century British design ideology can be se...
Discusses Spark\u27s well-known novel, recognizing its curious amalgamation of acerbic humour, eleg...
Muriel Spark\u27s fiction, often considered as being religious in theme and content, is equally dist...
The essay suggests how the relationship between catholicism and creativity is structured in Spark's ...
A striking feature of Muriel Spark’s fiction is its insistence on the reality of the supernatural, w...
This essay considers Muriel Spark’s experience, staging and critique of ‘fake news’, or the propagan...
Science Fiction as a literary genre offers a unique platform for social commentary. It presents plau...
Muriel Spark’s novels are full of characters who offer advice to live by – advice both good and bad....
Literary fiction and social science, despite the fact that they comprise two methodologically autono...
Muriel Spark’s novels are full of characters who offer advice to live by – advice both good and bad....
What is clear from even a cursory reading of Muriel Spark’s dazzling and cunning fictions is that sh...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2012My dissertation examines the emergence of a new langua...
The central argument of this thesis is that several tropes or motifs exist in social novels of the 1...